Well these people making these calls are finding the temp folder
If you’re buying heroin you can afford therapy.
I thought we knew this already. I was trying to buy better pots and pans like a month ago and did about 30 hours of research and just everything I found made me mad and this was one of the things.
Gross. Who would want that?
Not sure if that is a serious question, but it’s because formatting doesn’t depend on the type of variables but going to the definition of a field obviously depends on the type that the field is in.
formatting does depend on the type of variables. Go look at ktfmt’s codebase and come back after you’ve done so…
Maybe my example was not clear enough for you - I guess it’s possible you’ve never experienced working intellisense, so you don’t understand the feature I’m describing.
Lol, nice try with the insult there. I code in Kotlin, my intellisense works just fine. I just think you’re quite ignorant and have no clue what you’re actually talking about.
Ctrl-click on bar. Where does it jump to?
it gives you an option, just like if it was an interface. Did you actually try this out before commenting? Guessing not. And how often are you naming functions the exact same thing across two different classes without using an interface? And if you were using an interface intellisense would work the exact same way, giving you the option to jump to any of the implementations.
I’m sorry, but you clearly haven’t thought this out, or you’re really quite ignorant as to how intellisense works in all languages (including Ruby, and including statically typed languages).
Reynolds wrap literally has this as a faq on their website because so many people think it.
I think you mean pineapple quality . Bah dum tisss
By using the AST? Do you really not know how languages work? I mean seriously, this is incredibly basic stuff. You don’t need to know the type to jump to the ast node location. Do you think that formatters for dynamic languages need to know the type in order to format them properly? Then why in the world would you need it to know where to jump to in a type definition!?!
Edit: also in the case of Ruby, the entire thing runs on a VM which used to be YARV but I think might have changed recently. So there’s literally bytecode providing all the information needed to run it. I highly recommend reading a book about how the Ruby internals work since you seem to think you understand but it’s quite clear you don’t, or for some reason think “jump to” is this magical thing that requires types.
Jump to declarations or usages has absolutely nothing to do with types so I have no clue why you think type annotations to make jump to useful.
Was pretty sure before clicking it was going to be Colorado and lo-and-behold. Colorado is killing it with everything lately.
I’m still looking for the glasses to show op is a professional.
The article you linked is all conceptual. It’s most likely just a wireless network like ricochet, nothing to do with law enforcement.
Ligatures make code way easier to read, especially if you’re using lambdas or a language with different comparison operators than “normal”.
Denver is doing a lot of things right, and a lot of things wrong, but at least we’re trying.
It says 2023, not 24. Commenter typo’d. and the top number is correct. Bottom one is probably custom filled out, not based on actual work history.
There’s not even an e after the l
Just use asdf or the alternative that works on windows. You can specify all your languages in the file even for maven or gradle or any thing else as well. No more managing installs.
They’re probably talking about things like street signs: https://ktla.com/news/local-news/the-font-on-your-highway-sign-tells-the-story-of-a-decades-long-battle/